Title of article :
Attending to threat: Race-based patterns of selective attention
Author/Authors :
Sophie Trawalter، نويسنده , , Sophie and Todd، نويسنده , , Andrew R. and Baird، نويسنده , , Abigail A. and Richeson، نويسنده , , Jennifer A.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2008
Pages :
6
From page :
1322
To page :
1327
Abstract :
The present research investigated the extent to which the stereotype that young Black men are threatening and dangerous has become so robust and ingrained in the collective American unconscious that Black men now capture attention, much like evolved threats such as spiders and snakes. Specifically, using a dot-probe detection paradigm, White participants revealed biased attention toward Black faces relative to White faces (Study 1). Because the faces were presented only briefly (30-ms), the bias is thought to reflect the early engagement of attention. The attentional bias was eliminated, however, when the faces displayed averted eye-gaze (Study 2). That is, when the threat communicated by the Black faces was attenuated by a relevant, competing socio-emotional cue—in this case, averted eye-gaze—they no longer captured perceivers’ attention. Broader implications for social cognition, as well as public policies that reify these prevailing perceptions of young Black men are discussed.
Keywords :
Racial and ethnic attitudes , social perception , visual attention , social cognition , Threat
Journal title :
Journal of Experimental Social Psychology
Serial Year :
2008
Journal title :
Journal of Experimental Social Psychology
Record number :
1958519
Link To Document :
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